<?php

return array(

	/*
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	| Default Authentication Driver
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	|
	| This option controls the authentication driver that will be utilized.
	| This drivers manages the retrieval and authentication of the users
	| attempting to get access to protected areas of your application.
	|
	| Supported: "database", "eloquent"
	|
	*/
   'multi' => array(
        'user' => array(
            'driver' => 'eloquent',
            'model' => 'User'
        ),
        'admin' => array(
            'driver' => 'database',
            'table' => 'sys_admin'
        )
    ),


	// 'driver' => 'eloquent',

	/*
	// |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	// | Authentication Model
	// |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	// |
	// | When using the "Eloquent" authentication driver, we need to know which
	// | Eloquent model should be used to retrieve your users. Of course, it
	// | is often just the "User" model but you may use whatever you like.
	// |
	// */

	// 'model' => 'User',

	
	// |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	// | Authentication Table
	// |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	// |
	// | When using the "Database" authentication driver, we need to know which
	// | table should be used to retrieve your users. We have chosen a basic
	// | default value but you may easily change it to any table you like.
	// |
	

	// 'table' => 'users',

	// /*
	// |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	// | Password Reminder Settings
	// |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	// |
	// | Here you may set the settings for password reminders, including a view
	// | that should be used as your password reminder e-mail. You will also
	// | be able to set the name of the table that holds the reset tokens.
	// |
	// | The "expire" time is the number of minutes that the reminder should be
	// | considered valid. This security feature keeps tokens short-lived so
	// | they have less time to be guessed. You may change this as needed.
	// |
	// */

	'reminder' => array(

		'email' => 'emails.auth.reminder',

		'table' => 'password_reminders',

		'expire' => 60,

	),

);